Human activation-induced deaminase lacks strong replicative strand bias or preference for cytosines in hairpin loops

Author:

Sakhtemani Ramin123ORCID,Perera Madusha L W1,Hübschmann Daniel456,Siebert Reiner7,Lawrence Michael S23ORCID,Bhagwat Ashok S18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48202, USA

2. Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

3. Broad Institute of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

4. Molecular Precision Oncology Program, National Center for Tumor Diseases, Heidelberg and German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany

5. Heidelberg Institute for Stem cell Technology and Experimental Medicine, Heidelberg, Germany

6. German Cancer Consortium, Heidelberg, Germany

7. Institute of Human Genetics, Ulm University and Ulm University Medical Center, Ulm, Germany

8. Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI 48201, USA

Abstract

Abstract Activation-induced deaminase (AID) is a DNA-cytosine deaminase that mediates maturation of antibodies through somatic hypermutation and class-switch recombination. While it causes mutations in immunoglobulin heavy and light chain genes and strand breaks in the switch regions of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene, it largely avoids causing such damage in the rest of the genome. To help understand targeting by human AID, we expressed it in repair-deficient Escherichia coli and mapped the created uracils in the genomic DNA using uracil pull-down and sequencing, UPD-seq. We found that both AID and the human APOBEC3A preferentially target tRNA genes and transcription start sites, but do not show preference for highly transcribed genes. Unlike A3A, AID did not show a strong replicative strand bias or a preference for hairpin loops. Overlapping uracilation peaks between these enzymes contained binding sites for a protein, FIS, that helps create topological domains in the E. coli genome. To confirm whether these findings were relevant to B cells, we examined mutations from lymphoma and leukemia genomes within AID-preferred sequences. These mutations also lacked replicative strand bias or a hairpin loop preference. We propose here a model for how AID avoids causing mutations in the single-stranded DNA found within replication forks.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Wayne State University

German Ministry of Science and Education

ICGC DE-Mining

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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